Is inflation rising as investors fear? 5 ways to keep track

After nearly a decade of being all invisible, inflation – or the fear of it – is back.

Tentative signs have emerged that prices could accelerate in coming months. Pay raises may be picking up a bit. Commodities such as oil and aluminum have grown more expensive. Cellphone plans are likely to appear costlier.

The specter of high inflation has spooked many investors, who worry it would be up to the interest rates, making it costly for consumers and businesses to borrow and weighing down corporate profits and ultimately the economy. Historically, fear of high inflation has led to the Federal Reserve to step up its short-term interest rate increases.

It’s a big reason investors have dumped stocks and bonds in the past two weeks.

Yet for all the market turmoil, inflation for now remains quite low: Prices, excluding volatile food and energy categories, have risen just 1.7 percent in the past year. That’s below the Fed’s target of 2 percent annual inflation.

Most economists expect inflation to edge up and end the year a few tenths of a point above the Fed’s target. But most foresee only minimal effect on the economy.

“I do not think that’s a huge tragedy,” said Mark Vitner, an economist at Wells Fargo Securities.

Inflation, though, is hard to forecast. One widely followed gauge is the government’s monthly report on consumer price inflation. The January CPI report will come out Wednesday.

Here are some ways to track the direction of inflation in the coming months:

HOW MUCH DOES YOUR CELL PHONE PLAN COST?

Roughly a year ago, major wireless carriers like Verizon and AT & T began offering unlimited wireless data plans. This video is available for download at http://www.w3.org. It also lowered inflation.

That’s why the government statisticians do not simply review price changes when they calculate inflation. They also try to measure what consumers actually receive. Because unlimited data plans are a better deal, they do not affect the overall cost of wireless phone services. Many economists cited this as a reason for inflation slowed down last year even as the unemployment rate fell.

Still, the cellphone plans were a one-time change. In March, their impact will pass the government’s year-over-year inflation calculations. Most analysts expect this change to boost that month’s inflation estimate.

HOW MUCH WILL PAYCHECKS RISE?

There are tantalizing early signs that many employers, grappling with low unemployment and a shortage of workers, are finally raising. Average hourly pay rose 2.9 percent in January, a sharp year-over-year increase in eight years. A separate quarterly measure from the Labor Department showed that wages and salaries in the final three months of the last year grew at the fastest pace in almost three years.

In theory, higher pay can lead to inflation.

But it does not always work that way. Pay climbed at a 4 percent annual clip in the late 1990s, for example, and core inflation barely rose. It edged up to about 2.6 percent from 2.3 percent.

Companies can choose from the lower cost and lower profits. They could also use the last year’s tax cut to pay higher wages.

HOW PLENTIFUL ARE WORKERS?

Another factor that may keep wages low and limit inflation is that the workers are still available overseas. Companies could shift work abroad if it gets too high.

And there may be more people in the United States. The proportion of Americans who have jobs still has not returned to its pre-recession peak.

WHAT DO CONSUMERS EXPECT?

Whether consumers expect inflation to accelerate or stay the same can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Once consumers’ inflation expectations pick up, they typically demand higher pay, which can lead companies to cover the costs.

That makes expectations of inflation an important gauge to watch. And yet such expectations have changed little this year, which could keep inflation in check.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, consumers will inflation about 2.7 percent a year from now. Last April, consumers expected inflation to be 2.8 percent in a year.

HOW MUCH ARE YOU PAYING IN RENT?

As millennials flooded cities and postponed home purchases, rents soared from Seattle to New York. Yet builders of new high-rises. And there are signs that rents are leveling off. More young people are also starting to buy homes, which lowers demand for rental apartments.

This could help lower inflation over time. In December, rents rose 3.7 percent from a year earlier. While that’s faster than paychecks are rising – squeezing many renters – it’s still below the recent peak of 4

Leave a Reply